Heighington Church of England Primary School

Coordinates: 54°35′49″N 1°37′16″W / 54.597°N 1.621°W / 54.597; -1.621

Heighington Church of England Primary School
Type Academy
Religion Church of England
Headmaster Neil Parker
Location Hopelands
Heighington
County Durham
DL5 6PH
England
DfE URN 137022 Tables
Ofsted Reports Pre-academy reports
Students 260
Gender Mixed
Ages 4–11
Website Official site

Heighinton CE Primary School is a Church of England primary school with academy status located in the village of Heighington, near Newton Aycliffe, County Durham. It educates around 260 pupils aged 4–11. It has a rural locality and has been assessed by Ofsted as providing an outstanding education. The Headmaster since 1995 has been Neil Parker.[1]

Academic standards

The Ofsted report on 22 May 2007 inspection, rating the school Outstanding, the highest possible assessment, said: "This is an outstanding school where pupils excel in all they do. National test results in English, mathematics, and science over recent years show that pupils’ achievement is outstanding. A combination of outstanding leadership and management, highly effective teaching and learning and a very well planned curriculum and other activities that meet the range of pupils' interests underpins everything the school does."[1]

This school has a well above average point score in English, Maths and Science. With English and Science at 100% pass Levels, and Maths at 97%. The average point score for recent examinations was 31.3 which is higher than both the local authority and national averages of 28.2 and 27.8 respectively.[2][3]

Premises

The premises were progressively extended between 2000 and 2004 with new classrooms and additional administrative space.[4] There was significant local opposition to this expansion on the grounds that children from outside the area would be attracted and so this would increase traffic. Letters of objection and a petition were submitted to the council but the plans went ahead regardless.[5]

Church bells project

Sponsored by BT, in 2004 the school undertook a project to research the origins of the St Michael's Church bells and produced a DVD and book multimedia package.[6]

School awards

Faculty awards

Notable former pupils

References

External links

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